What does local foods mean to you? While there is not one definition for “local” food - it is very personal and can vary from person to person. Some people are able to grow their own food. Others grow some food, and also support local producers by purchasing food from them. And still others only purchase local foods from local producers.

It is not too late to attend the 2017 Green Industry Summer Session at Owens Community College in NW Ohio. The annual event is held the first Wednesday of August. This year the event is held August 2nd. Registration begins at 11:00 am with a boxed lunch, with the first session starting at 11:45 am. The event concludes at 4:15 pm with opportunities to earn ISA, ODA and OCVN credits.

Trees matter in many ways; just ask the Ents. Their beauty and grace is wondrous, they are proven healers for hospital patients, their social importance as historical references is well-known, from Johnny Appleseed to the Signal Tree in Summit County, and their environmental services, well…

Check out treebenefits.com and itreetools.org for itemization of the economic benefits of the environmental services of trees: Storm water remediation, energy savings, air quality improvement, carbon effects, property values.

Earlier this week, Pamela Sherratt, Turfgrass Specialist in the Department of Horticulture and Crop Science at The Ohio State University alerted Extension to the potential of some questions coming into the Extension offices about a product, Roundup for Lawns from clientele across the state.

A walk through the aisles of the pest management area of a garden center this spring may cause some consumers to take a second look. While Roundup has been around for a long time, Roundup for Lawns is a new product that has recently hit the shelves. The same name and...

Each month, the United States Department of Agriculture's (USDA) Animal Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) updates and distributes an Emerald Ash Borer (EAB) (Agrilus planipennis Fairmaire) Detection Map. While EAB is "old news" to many in the buckeye state, it is interesting to continue to watch the progression of this invasive species in North America. In February 2003, EAB was confirmed for the first time in Ohio in Lucas County in NW Ohio, approximately seven months after the initial detection and identification in Michigan the summer before. Fast forward 14+ years later...

Are you looking to get your emerald ash borer (EAB) updates? Pesticides? Parasitoids? Why not learn more about EAB and other invasives from the comfortable of your own office or home? Tomorrow, February 21 is the official kick-off to the "2017 spring semester."

On Tuesday, February 21, 2017 at 11:00 am EST, Dr. Cliff Sadof with Purdue University will be providing an update on Chemical Control of EAB: What Works, What Doesn't Work, and Why. This session is the first of a series of presentations that include information on hemlock woolly...